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Continuous Improvement Training, Coaching & Facilitation

The GBMP Journal
Lean News, Events, Inspiration 'n More

Late Bloomers

10/22/2018

 
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​Last week as I climbed into my car, I glanced at a tub of morning glories that I’d started from seed last March.   All spring and summer the plant grew taller and taller leaping at one point off the trellis and over the garage door frame.   Green and gangly, my morning glory plant was the picture of health, but for one thing:  it had no flowers. I watered and fertilized, but each morning as I climbed into my car nary a bloom; even into the early fall there was only greenery.  With the first frost imminent, I’d pretty much given up on the idea of blooms.
 
But then, suddenly (or so it seemed) on October 19th there was a profusion of heavenly blue blossoms.  I waxed philosophical at the sight, reflecting that some of us are just late bloomers.  We find our passion, if we’re fortunate, a little later in life.
 
One week earlier I’d delivered the opening keynote at the Northeast Lean Conference in Providence, RI.  Before beginning, I asked the audience for a show of hands:  “How many of you,” I inquired, “when you entered the workforce and took your first job, had no idea that one day you’d be attending a conference that dealt with transforming your organization?”   Five hundred hands went up – almost everyone in the hall.    Perhaps there were a few twenty-somethings who knew from the first that this would be their career, but for most of us, there was no guiding vision of Lean Transformation when we took our first jobs.  For me personally, there were few resources to even prepare me for the struggle of a cultural and conceptual revolution.   I left school with a B.A. in English literature to work in a marketing department.  Today I relate happily that, with the exception of that first job, I’ve been equally unprepared for every job I’ve ever held.
 
In fact, if the hands in the audience are any indication, many of us entered the workforce with a different idea of the future.   Who knew we’d become excited about dealing with seemingly overwhelming challenges?  Who knew that a serendipitous struggle – or in some cases calamity – would draw us into the fray?  Who knew that would become a personal burning platform.   “Thank you,” I said before continuing, “Thank you for the important contributions that you all make.”  Late bloomers, all of us.
 
I’d be very interested to know, how did your Lean journey begin?  Please share your story.

O.L.D. 
PS A quick reminder: At the conference last week, we offered a special super early bird discount ticket price for next year’s Northeast Lean Conference – October 23-24, 2019 in Hartford CT – good through the end of this month. If you’re planning to attend (and you should be) register now and save huge (only $795 per person instead of the regular $995 for members, $1095 for non members). The theme will be “Total Employee Improvement”. We can’t wait.

Lean Practitioners Refine Skills at Northeast Conference

10/17/2018

 
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Event Reinforces Importance of Maintaining Focus on Bottom Line

Providence (October 12, 2018) – A crowd of over 500 Lean practitioners from more than 150 different organizations came together on Wednesday & Thursday October 10-11 to learn and share how to successfully embark on and sustain a Lean transformation at the fourteenth annual Northeast Lean Conference, “Profit from Lean: No Margin, No Mission”.

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The conference featured more than forty sessions. Among the topics covered:
  • The Myth of Lean & Profit: Change the Culture, Change the Game
  • Value Stream Mapping: Catalyst for Lean Transformation
  • Measuring Your Operational Excellence Culture & Impact
  • Challenges to Standardizing Lean Daily Management
  • Lean 3P
  • Next Gen Lean
  • Lean Math
  • Be a Project Ninja using Visual Management
  • Finding Profit is the Work of Management
  • Getting Results: Lessons from Toyota’s 25 years and 400 Projects Sharing TPS outside Toyota

The tenth Silver Toaster Award for Employee Excellence in Lean was presented to Danielle Salvas from KARL STORZ Endovision America (KSEA). Another 15 nominees were recognized for their contributions to continuous improvement in their organizations. Fourteen organizations, including Goodwill Industries, Dymotek, Fort Wayne Metals, Vibco, and Cooley Dickinson Hospital shared poster presentations of their Lean journeys to date (obstacles overcome, and lessons learned) in the always-popular Community of Lean Lounge.

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The conference, held annually by GBMP , is one of the most highly regarded Lean & Continuous Improvement conferences featuring passionate Lean practitioners from the manufacturing, healthcare, insurance, service and other key industry sectors from across the from across the country. They gather to learn new tools and techniques and get information and inspiration from innovative and experienced speakers on effecting and sustaining transformation for bottom line productivity improvements, increased profits, and more engaged and happy employees.  Planning is already underway for the 15 th annual event to be held on October 23-24, 2019 at the Connecticut Convention Center in Hartford CT. Registration will open soon and early bird ticket prices will be available through April 2019. For more information visit the conference website.

Hydroid Gets Lean

10/4/2018

 
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Since its origin in 2001, Hydroid has grown from a company with a few employees to over 200 employees today. With the company’s steady and consistent growth over the years, it became evident in 2015 that there was a need for change. Although the company had made efforts toward becoming Lean in the past, Hydroid’s leadership proactively searched for ways to better implement the process and build the business. With the help of The Greater Boston Manufacturing Partnership (GBMP) and funding through the Massachusetts Workforce Training Fund, Hydroid renewed its commitment to the Lean process.

Since reviving this process implementation in 2015, several employees have earned their GBMP Lean Certificates, with some continuing on in pursuit of their Society of Manufacturing Lean Bronze Certifications and Six Sigma belts. Today, Hydroid employees regularly participate in Lean improvement initiatives to steadily remove waste from the company. Bob Elliott, GBMP CI Manager working with the company said, “Hydroid has made a significant commitment to the Lean program both with time and resources. The Workforce Training Grant consisted of 89 days (712 hours) of training and practice. Each class was attended by 10-12 employees (Management and Direct Labor). Their commitment is certainly evident.”

Lean Paves the Way for Improvement
In terms of Lean procedures, the material handling and production departments were identified as areas within Hydroid that were ripe with opportunity. As with any change, when Lean was first reintroduced, there were obstacles to overcome.  One significant hurdle was getting employees to trust and believe in the process. Most production employees initially thought the Lean concepts could not be adopted simply due to product variety and complexity. There was also the belief that an immense amount of “local expert” or “floor lore” knowledge was required to build Hydroid’s wide range of products. A culture shift was needed and, after the early elimination of some of the common sources of day-to-day frustration, things started to change. Ideas for improvement started coming from different areas within the company, and the concept that it was ok to ask “why” things were done a certain way became more widely accepted.

The Production Dashboard
Since 2015, several significant initiatives have been put into place. One key change was the development of a digital Production Dashboard to support the visual control of the production team and schedule. Today, everyone at Hydroid has the ability to see what is ‘in-process’ on the production floor at any time. The production manager & team leads are able to monitor and adjust the production plan by assigning tasks, setting priorities and defining time estimates to support accurate capacity planning. The assemblers, in turn, can easily see their upcoming assignments.  When there is an issue, they can seek support by updating their production status.  In the past, these functions were typically done manually; making the process very labor intensive and impossible to maintain. The digital dashboard makes it possible to provide updates from any computer. Additionally, iPads have been installed in key areas on the production floor for locating manufacturing orders (MOs) and to update relevant information as soon as it is changed.

Value Stream Mapping
Through the use of Value Stream Maps, multiple processes have been documented to identify how different material and products move through the facility. Hydroid continues to use this information to improve the production floorplan, all in the effort to reduce unused space and ease the movement of people, material and information. A color-coded system has been established to identify different areas for material and production stages, and over a dozen dedicated work cells have been added without increasing the footprint of the production area, increasing production capacity by over 50%.
                                                 
Material Handling and Additional Improvements
The material handling and kitting process was improved through the creation of a “floor stock” station in the production area, which was replenished with a Kanban card system. In situations where stockroom employees would previously pick each piece of hardware for every kit, portable Assembly Hardware Kits are now available so that assemblers can quickly pull the exact hardware they need for their unique assembly without the need for someone to pull and count every item. This has reduced the time required to kit every order by over 60%, improved kit accuracy, and has helped to eliminate the once common problem of running out of frequently used parts.
Some of the other additional improvements include the creation of a Training Matrix to identify training gaps and, subsequently, create development plans.  Also, the internal documentation process has been improved and the amount of inventory and work-in-process has been reduced.

Hydroid’s Lean Success
As a result of these new tools and processes, Hydroid has improved on-time delivery and kitting accuracy. The most significant achievement has been reduction of defects, as well as a large reduction in material handling labor. Key statistics include:

Manufacturing Defects per 1,000 hours of labor
  • 2015 – 3.5 defects/1,000 hrs
  • 2016 – 3.2 defects/1,000 hrs
  • 2017 – 2.3 defects/1,000 hrs

Material Handling Hours as percentage of manufacturing hours
  • 2015 – 16%
  • 2016 – 14.8% (Changed to Floor stock/Hardware Kits mid-year)
  • 2017 – 5.7%

From making processes more efficient by removing unnecessary handling and processing, to improving the quality built directly into products through better designs and documentation, Hydroid has continued to stay focused on improving every aspect of their production cycle. When Hydroid now looks at all of the Lean improvements they have implemented over the past few years, they see orders being completed more efficiently; an improvement in the on-time delivery of spare parts orders; and a reduction in the turnaround time for order fulfillment.

Ken Kern, Director of Operations at Hydroid, is impressed with the result. “When we first rolled out the concept of Lean, it was met with a lot of skepticism, especially from long term employees who had seen it fail once already at Hydroid. We selected a team of employees to receive advanced Lean Bronze Certification Training from GBMP and to be the leaders in the implementation in the organization. Once the training began and improvements were seen, everybody got on board. Lean has fundamentally changed the way we operate throughout the production process, and the culture of continuous improvement is the way we now conduct our business. The application of real-life problems that GBMP embeds in their training has been a key to the cultural change.”
 
Hydroid’s adoption of Lean was evident in November 2018. Daryl Powell, Lean Programme Manager for Kongsberg Maritime Subsea in Horten, Norway, conducts Gemba walks through all KM Subsea organizations each year as well as the Lean maturity on the factory floor. This process is based on the Rapid Lean Assessment (RLA) technique detailed in Goodson’s (2002) Rapid Plant Assessment (from “Read a Plant Fast”, Harvard Business Review). Daryl invited special guest James Womack, Lean author, founder and Senior Advisor at the Lean Enterprise Institute (and Lean author of The Machine That Changed The World, Lean Thinking, Lean Solutions, and Gemba Walks) to participate in the RLA. In the two short years since the implementation of Lean, Hydroid achieved the top rating in all of KM Subsea, and Mr. Womack gave the highest ratings to all who participated in the assessment. He commented that he has toured hundreds of facilities, and Hydroid’s adoption of Lean on the factory floor rates among the top organizations he has toured, and that Hydroid has accomplished a lot in a short amount of time.
 
To date, Hydroid has conducted 4,444 hours of Lean training and will continue their training with GBMP well into the fall of 2018. The goal is for all areas of the organization to be involved in the LEAN journey; cultivating a “Continuous Improvement” culture and promoting a continued focus on identifying and removing waste from products and processes.

​ABOUT HYDROID
Located in the U.S. and a subsidiary of Kongsberg Maritime, Hydroid is the world’s most trusted manufacturer of advanced, field-proven Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs). Hydroid’s REMUS AUVs and marine robotics systems provide innovative and reliable full-picture solutions for the marine research, defense, hydrographic and offshore/energy markets. With the ability to dive to depths of 6,000 meters, explore shallow waters and hover in hazardous areas where navigation is difficult, REMUS AUVs can be used for a number of applications. They have been involved with undersea mine countermeasures that have helped save lives by eliminating human divers from mine fields.  Additionally, REMUS AUVs have helped solve plane and shipwreck mysteries, including locating Air France Flight 447 wreckage, generating 3D mapping of the Titanic, and finding the USS Indianapolis at a depth of over 18,000 feet. REMUS AUVs also offer scientists a new view on pressing global issues including climate change, the world’s declining fish population and environmental  disasters.

About GBMP: The Greater Boston Manufacturing Partnership is a not for profit offering customized Lean and Six Sigma training with a mission to increase global competitiveness and employment opportunities in the United States. GBMP is a licensed affiliate of The Shingo Institute with 4 certified instructors on staff. GBMP also produces the annual Northeast Lean Conference which attracts more than 600 manufacturing professionals from around the country each autumn in New England, now in its 12th year. GBMP provides a membership community for Lean practitioners from manufacturing, healthcare, insurance and other industries and produces an award-winning library of Lean training materials comprised of more than 30 DVDs (available streaming by subscription at www.leanflix.org), games, manuals and workbooks, including Toast Kaizen, the #1 selling Lean training video in the world. For more information about GBMP please visit www.gbmp.org
 
For more information about the Massachusetts Workforce Training Fund Grant please visit
www.workforcetrainingfund.org

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More Than Toast

10/1/2018

 
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​It’s hard to believe that 2018 is the 20th anniversary for the Toast Kaizen video.  After two decades, nearly one hundred and fifty thousand copies have been sold – in more than a dozen languages from Spanish to Icelandic.  It’s everywhere.  Several years ago, while walking down the streets of Dubai, I was stopped by a gentleman who pointed to me and declared, “You’re the Toast Man.”    I frequently encounter folks who tell me, “You’re famous,” to which I reply, “No, the “Toast Kaizen” video is famous.”  And happily so.  What was originally intended as a device to encourage fellow managers to get out of their offices and go see has become a non-threatening way to explain continuous improvement to almost anyone.   As I say on the video,  “It’s not about the work, it’s about the things that get in the way of the work”.

While it’s gratifying to think that this campy thirty-minute video has found a place in Lean Transformations, it’s also a little concerning when I hear that the “Toast Kaizen” video isthe Lean training.  What was created as an icebreaker, has occasionally been overblown beyond its purpose.   Some time ago, while speaking at the Shingo Conference I asked attendees in the audience how many had seen the Toast video.  Nearly every hand went up.  But when I asked who had read any of Shigeo Shingo’s books, only a few hands went up.  I asked the audience, “Did you know there’s a whole lot more to Lean than the Toast video?”

Yes, a whole lot more than viewing the “Toast Kaizen” video will be needed to really receive the benefits of Lean.  Toast is just a small catalyst to kick off the continuous improvement engine.  This is why at the 14th Annual Northeast L.E.A.N. conference, while we celebrate Toast’s 20th (tattoos and Toast caps for everyone), we are also homing in on those transformers that have truly become Lean Learning organizations and whose compelling results bear witness to their efforts.

There’s still time to register, but seats are filling fast.  Please join me on October 10-11 at the Providence Convention Center. Rhode Island is beautiful this time of year. I’d be remiss if I didn’t also mention the two Shingo Institute courses – Discover Excellence and Continuous Improvement – which are being offered in conjunction with the conference. You can learn more about those here.
​

O.L.D.

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